The Italian ended her Rome campaign in tears over an injured leg and another horrid loss to Serena. But by making her first final there, Errani pushed herself back up to No. 11. And you thought Maria didn’t like playing Williams. B+
Ana Ivanovic
She won’t win the French Open, but it’s no longer a joke to mention the 2008 champion among the contenders. After five years, Ana’s game is a match for her talent again. B+
Milos Raonic
Just when I wonder whether the guy can do anything other than serve, he reaches the semis in Rome and threatens Djokovic on clay. Raonic made the Djoker mad, and then let him off the hook in the second-set tiebreaker. B+
Grigor Dimitrov
Little steps are the key to tennis, they say, and Dimitrov has taken one after the other in the course of his career so far. That was true again over these two weeks: By the time they were over he had moved up a year in age, to 23, and up two spots in the rankings, to No. 12. In Madrid, Dimitrov lost to Berdych; in Rome he beat Berdych and reached his first Masters semi. Where he was crushed to the brink of tears by Nadal. Little steps. B+
David Ferrer
A semi, a quarter, three-set losses to Nishikori and Djokovic. That’s not progress, but at 32, that’s not exactly a slide, either. B
Agnieszka Radwanska
A semi, a quarter, losses to Sharapova and Jankovic. She did a lot of running and came out standing in the same place. It must have been worth it, though, to beat Svetlana Kuznetsova for the first time in six years. B
Andy Murray
He may not have made himself a serious threat in Paris, but Murray found his game in his classic quarterfinal loss to Nadal in Rome. Is he ready to beat Rafa, a man he hadn't played in more than two years, in a big moment? Probably not. Is he rounding into form in time for the tournament that matters most to him, Wimbledon? Probably so. B
Caroline Garcia
She qualified in Madrid, beat Errani, nearly beat Radwanska, and moved into the Top 50. How will she respond to the home-court pressure in Paris? Now it’s at least interesting to consider. B
Li Na
She’s No. 2 in the world and a former French Open champion. So two quarterfinal defeats, to Sharapova and especially to Errani, qualifies as a disappointment. B-
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga
Losses to Giraldo and Raonic, and a ranking at No. 14, are making Jo seem less relevant than he's been in a long time. Good thing he still has Paris. C
Stan Wawrinka